Reflections on the Revolution in FranceHackett Publishing, 15 wrz 1987 - 288 John Pocock's edition of Burke's Reflections is two classics in one: Burke's Reflections and Pocock's reflections on Burke and the eighteenth century. |
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Strona xi
... King or his opponents had been the more to blame for it; the execution of the King in 1649, and the temporary abolition of the parliamentary monarchy, had been not so much a disaster as a crime, for which blame rested unequivocally upon ...
... King or his opponents had been the more to blame for it; the execution of the King in 1649, and the temporary abolition of the parliamentary monarchy, had been not so much a disaster as a crime, for which blame rested unequivocally upon ...
Strona xii
... king or a government than obliged to maintain and preserve a constitution already existing. If (as some of them said) “utmost necessity” had obliged them to dethrone a king and enthrone another, it had also obliged them to preserve the ...
... king or a government than obliged to maintain and preserve a constitution already existing. If (as some of them said) “utmost necessity” had obliged them to dethrone a king and enthrone another, it had also obliged them to preserve the ...
Strona xiii
... King of making improper use of his influence and governing through hidden means, but had stopped far short of any suggestion that he might forfeit his throne to the people. We should remember, all the same, that the Reflections on the ...
... King of making improper use of his influence and governing through hidden means, but had stopped far short of any suggestion that he might forfeit his throne to the people. We should remember, all the same, that the Reflections on the ...
Strona xiv
Edmund Burke J. G. A. Pocock. mistrusted him, and not by one of the King's Friends. But far to the left of Burke, there were those prepared to talk of the crises of the late eighteenth century as a replay of those of the seventeenth; and ...
Edmund Burke J. G. A. Pocock. mistrusted him, and not by one of the King's Friends. But far to the left of Burke, there were those prepared to talk of the crises of the late eighteenth century as a replay of those of the seventeenth; and ...
Strona xvii
... King who was its supreme head and governor replaced against its will by secular political action. Was the Church in England a mere extension of the ruling order, as some of Henry VIII's legislation might seem to suggest; or was it also ...
... King who was its supreme head and governor replaced against its will by secular political action. Was the Church in England a mere extension of the ruling order, as some of Henry VIII's legislation might seem to suggest; or was it also ...
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